Lol god damnit, Elias was who I was eyeing here to play with Cowley, as he has an underrated defensive game.
Be back with my pick in a few minutes.
Be back with my pick in a few minutes.
He's been my ideal target to play with Lach the entire time because of what you said here.Lol god damnit, Elias was who I was eyeing here to play with Cowley, as he has an underrated defensive game.
Be back with my pick in a few minutes.
Makar and Reardon have to be the 2 best peaks of any Dmen left, but both also have the shortest careers/GP of any D who will go in this range.
'bout time.I was thinking winger here the entire time, so I'm continuing the trend.
The Windsor Spitfires are proud to select Patrik Elias.
Will PM next.
For which category? Best peak or shortest career.
Chicago will round out our blueline's top 4 with a hard-hitting Dman who was the best player (and Captain) on the Bruins teams that went to back to back Finals in 1957 & 58: Fern Flaman, D
Norris record:
1955: 3rd (behind Harvey and Kelly)
1956: 5th
1957: 3rd (behind Harvey and Kelly)
1958: 3rd (behind Harvey and Gadsby)
1959: 5th
1958 Coach's poll (the only such poll we have for the Original 6 period):
- Doug Harvey won for "best defensive defenseman." Flaman and Pronovost are the only other two defensemen with votes.
- Flaman finished 1st for "best fighter."
Legends of Hockey: ""Basing his game on discipline and a strong physical presence, Ferdinand Charles Flaman was one of the game's top stay-at-home defensemen in the 1950s. Although he contributed to his team's transitional game when needed, it was as an open-ice bodychecker and for his ability to clear opponents from around his goal that Flaman acquired his reputation"